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EUROPAN <strong>12</strong> SITES <strong>16</strong> PARTICIPATING COUNTRIES<br />

VILA VIÇOSA<br />

URRETXU-IRIMO<br />

ALMADA-PORTO BRANDAO<br />

DON BENITO<br />

ASSEN<br />

SCHIEDAM<br />

GRONINGEN<br />

REGIONALE 20<strong>16</strong><br />

WITTENBERGE<br />

SERAING MANNHEIM BITTERFELD-WOLFEN<br />

CINEY<br />

NÜRNBERG<br />

ROUEN<br />

HEIDELBERG<br />

FOSSES<br />

DONAUWÖRTH<br />

PARIS-SACLAY KAISERSLAUTERN<br />

PARIS<br />

KAUFBEUREN MÜNCHEN<br />

SAINT-HERBLAIN<br />

KREUZLINGEN / KONSTANZ<br />

VICHY<br />

VAL D’ALLIER<br />

BARCELONA<br />

MARLY<br />

AMSTETTEN<br />

COUVET GRAZ<br />

MILANO<br />

ASKER BÆRUM<br />

ÅS<br />

KOBENHAVN<br />

VENEZIA<br />

MARSEILLE PLAN D’AOU<br />

KRISTINEHAMN<br />

HAMMARÖ HANINGE<br />

KALMAR<br />

AALBORG<br />

HÖGANÄS<br />

WARSZAWA<br />

WIEN-KAGRAN<br />

WIEN SIEMENSÄCKER<br />

BUDAPEST<br />

GJILAN<br />

KUOPIO<br />

HELSINKI<br />

AUSTRIA<br />

BELGIUM<br />

DENMARK<br />

FINLAND<br />

FRANCE<br />

GERMANY<br />

HUNGARY<br />

ITALY<br />

KOSOVO<br />

NETHERLANDS<br />

NORWAY<br />

POLAND<br />

PORTUGAL<br />

SPAIN<br />

SWEDEN<br />

SWITZERLAND<br />

COMPETITION DATES<br />

LAUNCHING: 18 MARCH 2013<br />

ENTRY: 28 JUNE 2013<br />

RESULTS: 13 DECEMBER 2013<br />

INFORMATION / REGISTRATION /<br />

FOLDER OF SITES / ENTRY<br />

ON EUROPEAN WEB SITE:<br />

WWW.EUROPAN-EUROPE.EU<br />

CONTACTS<br />

EUROPAN EUROPE<br />

CONTACT@EUROPAN-EUROPE.EU<br />

T +33 1 40 81 24 47


CALENDAR EUROPAN <strong>12</strong> EUROPAN <strong>12</strong> IN 10 POINTS<br />

PREPARATION<br />

June 20<strong>12</strong> - Feb. 2013: Site research and problematization<br />

January 11th-<strong>12</strong>th, 2013: Forum of Sites - Debates around the topics and strategies<br />

of the preselected <strong>sites</strong> by families<br />

COMPETITION<br />

Launching and Registration<br />

Monday March 18th, 2013<br />

Opening date of the European website with theme, rules, descriptions of the national<br />

Europan structures, a short presentation of the <strong>sites</strong> proposed for the session and lists of<br />

the national juries.<br />

Opening date for registration on the European website and download of the complete site<br />

folders<br />

Questions on the <strong>sites</strong> via the Internet forum<br />

Friday May 17th, 2013: Deadline for submitting questions on the <strong>sites</strong><br />

Friday May 31st, 2013: Deadline for grouped answers on the <strong>sites</strong><br />

Questions on the rules via the Internet forum<br />

Friday June 14th, 2013: Deadline for submitting questions on the rules<br />

Friday June 21st, 2013: Deadline for answers on the rules<br />

Submission of entries<br />

Friday June 28th, 2013: Deadline for submitting documents<br />

Selection<br />

September-October 2013: Shortlisting of entries by the national juries<br />

Beginning of Nov. 2013: Comparative European analysis of the shortlisted ideas<br />

Mid-November 2013: Forum of Cities and Juries<br />

End November 2013: Final selection of winning projects by the national juries<br />

Results<br />

Friday 13 December 2013: Announcement of the results<br />

November 2014: Intersessions Forum<br />

1. Europan is directed at young professionals of the architectural and urban design under<br />

40 years of age and with a European degree or working in Europe. Each team must include<br />

at least one architect.<br />

2. Europan is a call for projects of ideas at the urban and architectural scale, followed by<br />

implementations.<br />

3. Europan is a European federation of the national structures organising the <strong>competition</strong>s,<br />

launched simultaneously on a common theme and with common objectives.<br />

4. Rules and judging methods are identical in all the <strong>participating</strong> <strong>countries</strong>. The <strong>competition</strong>s<br />

are open, public, European and anonymous. Competitors can register freely in the<br />

country of their choice.<br />

5. A series of urban <strong>sites</strong> in European towns, accompanied with a programme brief, is proposed<br />

to competitors. Competitors choose from these <strong>sites</strong> the one(s) on which they want<br />

to submit their project(s).<br />

6. Each project must have two types of entry: the first is a strategic reflection-project<br />

responding to the session topic and the urban challenges, and on the urban scale of the<br />

chosen site. The second is an executable architectural project on a clearly defined area of<br />

the site.<br />

7. In each country a national jury judges the strategic reflection and architectural projects<br />

on their <strong>sites</strong>. The Europan Scientific Committee then compares and analyses the projects<br />

together on a European level, launching the debate between the <strong>sites</strong> representatives and<br />

the jury members during a Forum. Finally, the national jury meets a second time to make<br />

the final decision of the winning teams.<br />

8. Each of the national <strong>competition</strong>s has their own jury that designates winners and runners-up,<br />

who receive a prize. Some non-rewarded projects may receive a special mention.<br />

9. Prize-winning teams are then helped by the Europan organisers to secure<br />

commissions to be implemented. After the announcement of the results, meetings are organised<br />

for each site with the city representatives, the juries and the winning teams.<br />

10. Prize-winning proposals are exhibited and published on a national level. On a European<br />

scale, a results catalogue is published and an inter-sessions meeting is organised to gather<br />

the rewarded teams, the <strong>sites</strong> representatives, the juries and the organisers to discuss the<br />

results.


EUROPAN <strong>12</strong> THEME<br />

ADAPTABLE CITY<br />

INSERTING THE URBAN RHYTHMS<br />

CITIES ON THE MOVE<br />

Europe’s cities are engaged in a radical transformation: they need urgently to reduce their<br />

ecological footprint to help resolve the energy crisis, combat the greenhouse effect and<br />

preserve nonrenewable resources. This transformation applies both to their morphology<br />

(form) and their metabolism (including all energy expenditure), and is highly dependent on<br />

the ways of living they provide. To achieve this, all these changes have to be thought out<br />

quickly, and that is why Europan <strong>12</strong> proposes to explore the question of time with a view to<br />

making the city more adaptable.<br />

RHYTHMS AND LIFE CYCLES OF URBAN SPACES<br />

This entails, for example, providing new ways of sharing collective space and methods of<br />

governance. This requires a chronotypical approach, blending the spatial and temporal<br />

dimensions and, for example, establishing temporary projects for spaces. This also means<br />

developing a sensitive form of urban planning, where different places can be used at different<br />

times, and rethinking the quality of the spaces from that perspective. This raises the<br />

question of the “hospitality” of urban spaces and their transparency for users of the city.<br />

It is also important to think about intensive development projects, to connect them better<br />

with the realities of today’s city. It is also about considering the multiple uses the city,<br />

and in particular the question of the sharing and recycling of buildings, to avoid excessive<br />

consumption of space and thereby to promote a sustainable city by exploiting time in its<br />

full range.<br />

In fact, today it seems that the question of land, of the city and of architecture needs to be<br />

considered in relation to the timeframes of use and of urban planning. Incorporating the<br />

dimension of time into urban policy is a factor that needs to be worked on, because it affects<br />

the two principal characteristics of the contemporary city: sprawl and fragmentation.<br />

The city now spreads not only in space but in time, and the emerging feature of the modern<br />

city is that of one that is continuously active, 24/7. Urban sprawl, for its part, affects our<br />

experience of the city, which can also be perceived in terms of segregation. Time therefore<br />

reflects the reality of the fragmented city, a polychronic city that operates to different<br />

timeframes.<br />

So for Europan <strong>12</strong>, the emphasis is on reflecting the rhythms and life cycles of urban<br />

spaces so that they can adapt to change, without losing their identity, can slow down and<br />

speed up, adjust to cycles and transformations in the context of an uncertain future. So<br />

it is about anticipating the inevitable impacts of change, allowing a plurality of uses, but<br />

also being capable of making creative use of what already exists. And therefore adjusting<br />

to what is already there while developing visions of the possible that take account of both<br />

permanence and variation.<br />

A RESILIENT AND ADAPTABLE CITY<br />

The specific priority of this session, therefore, in projects of an urbano-architectural scale,<br />

is to explore time in its relation to space by making the city resilient and adaptable.<br />

Resilience is the capacity of a space to recover a function or a development after experiencing<br />

a trauma.<br />

Adaptability is the quality of a space that can be easily adapted to harmonise with the<br />

changes of use that it undergoes or may undergo.<br />

The city has to regenerate after experiencing divisive urban operations or accelerate to<br />

adjust to rapid development or conversely be revitalised in terms of it uses. To do this,<br />

however, urban projects need to acquire a capacity to adapt to new timeframes of use,<br />

which are better coordinated between themselves.<br />

The notion of an “adaptable city” is of a city that can be worked without breaking, capable<br />

of extending its possibilities and retrieving its forms, in space and time. In this case, the<br />

underlying question becomes: how do you introduce time into urban projects?<br />

PROGRAMMES BETWEEN LEGACY, INVENTION and REVERSIBILITY<br />

In terms of programme, it is less a question of flexibility or functionality than of scenarios<br />

for appropriate transformations between legacy (the history of places), invention (innovation<br />

in spatial arrangements that accommodate a plurality of uses) and reversibility (temporary<br />

developments). It is less about technology than a method of establishing links between<br />

natural and cultural environments and finding compensations and connections. This<br />

means, for example, that plans for new buildings need to include measures for nature and<br />

landscape and new projects need to be capable of harmonising with a system by adding<br />

meaning and purpose (re-connection).<br />

To achieve these objectives, time and the effects of time need to be considered and incorporated<br />

into a responsible and inventive analysis of urban rhythms. For this, one needs<br />

to evaluate/assess what is already there, and think about the future within an open programme<br />

that incorporates different timescales: for example, different rhythms of life, the<br />

rhythms of day and night, of the seasons and of successive generations.

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